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  1. William Juxon (1582 – 4 June 1663) was an English churchman, Bishop of London from 1633 to 1646 and Archbishop of Canterbury from 1660 until his death.

  2. William Juxon (1582-4 de junio de 1663) fue un eclesiástico inglés, Obispo de Londres de 1633 a 1649 y Arzobispo de Canterbury desde 1660 hasta su muerte. 1 . Biografía. Educación. Juxon era hijo de Richard Juxon y probablemente nació en Chichester y se educó en la escuela primaria local, The Prebendal School.

  3. William Juxon (born 1582, probably Chichester, Sussex, Eng.—died June 4, 1663, London) was the archbishop of Canterbury and minister to King Charles I on the scaffold. As lord high treasurer, Juxon was the last English clergyman to hold both secular and clerical offices in the medieval tradition of clerical state service.

  4. William Juxon, Archbishop of Canterbury. primary name: primary name: Juxon, William. Details. individual; British; Male. Life dates. 1582-1663. Biography. Chaplain to Charles I, to whom he administered the last rites on the scaffold. Bishop of London from 1633 until deprived of the bishopric in 1649. Lord High Treasurer, 1636-41.

  5. Overview. William Juxon. (1582—1663) archbishop of Canterbury. Quick Reference. (1582–1663). Juxon, a bishop and statesman, came to prominence through the favour of Laud, who persuaded Charles I to make him bishop of London in 1633 and, three years later, lord treasurer.

  6. William Juxon was a clerical administrator and a rival to William Laud for the primacy. He was bishop of London before the civil wars and archbishop of Canterbury after the Restoration, but he played a minor role in the House of Lords and the religious controversies of the day.

  7. www.fulhampalace.org › resistance › bishop-juxonBishop Juxon - Fulham Palace

    William Juxon, Bishop of London 1633 – 1646. Bishop Juxon was Bishop of London from 1633 until the interregnum in 1646. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Juxon became Archbishop of Canterbury, a position he held until his death in 1663.